Make a difference for a good cause in honor of your loved one.
Displaying 541–552 of 14,339
Al-Anon provides support to anyone affected by someone else's alcohol addiction or alcohol use disorder, regardless of whether sobriety is present.
Solus Christus strives to meet the emotional and spiritual needs of women experiencing homelessness trauma, and addiction, as well as supplying their physical needs of food, clothing, and shelter.
The Lantern's mission is to provide quality sober living to the chemically dependent person and to educate and assist people with recovery from drug and alcohol addiction. The Lantern's long-term care philosophy is based on a 12-step model that recognizes drug and alcohol addictions as progressive, chronic and potentially fatal diseases. Our organization is open to all adult men and has no residency restrictions, while the geographic service area is primarily focused on Cuyahoga County, many of our residents are also drawn from the outlying suburbs.
Planting Possibilities mission is to improve the possibility of meaningful employment for adults with disabilities by providing supportive job skills training, employment or volunteer opportunities in a setting where each individual's unique abilities can be nurtured and developed.
Easterseals Serving Greater Cincinnati creates #BreakthroughMoments on the journey to employment for people living with disabilities, facing economic disadvantages, and veterans and military families.
Our mission is to foster independence, improve quality of life, and empower the people that we serve.
Leading healthy communities in the prevention of substance misuse and the promotion of mental health wellness.
Founded in 1998, the mission of the Keating Center is to provide recovery services for alcoholics and drug addicts in a sober living environment. Sober living services should be available to any man or woman who has the genuine determination to overcome their alcoholism or addiction without regard to their ability to pay for the help they require. That vision calls for these services to be provided without the direct assistance of any Local, State or Federal agency, depending instead upon the private support of individuals and organizations who believe in communities helping themselves.
To Positively Impact the Quality of Life of Those We Serve by Providing Professional, Caring, Cost-Effective Behaviorial Healthcare Services.
To service participating Alcoholics Anonymous groups in the Indianapolis/Central Indiana area in carrying out functions to aid recovering alcoholics.
“Transform families by providing help, hope, and healing for mothers and their children to live responsible drug-free lives.” Created from the vision of a small group of women in the Junior League of Greater Fort Lauderdale in 1995, The Susan B. Anthony Recovery Center has grown from one group home, housing five mothers and six children, to a beautiful 5.5 acre campus in Pembroke Pines with the capacity to serve over sixty families. In addition, through satellite campuses, we are increasing our capacity to serve many more. Our ultimate goals are the removal of barriers for women entering addiction treatment, the prevention of foster care placement for their children, and an end to the cycle of addiction and abuse for families. Since we began in 1995, Susan B. Anthony Recovery Center has helped to reunify over 850 families and has provided the intensive services necessary to stop the cycle of family dysfunction and substance addiction for over 1500 children. One of the largest barriers to entry for mothers seeking treatment is child placement. At the center we focus on supporting both the mother and child(ren). We reduce or eliminate family risk factors by promoting a positive sense of self, delivering individual and group counseling services, providing peer group activities, maintaining well defined structure and offering many opportunities for support. Most importantly, we strive to stop the cycle of addiction by providing the most important protective factor of all, a healthy parent intervening on behalf of the child(ren) during their early development. For nearly 20 years we have done amazing work. Yet, prescription pain killers and heroin use is on the rise, despite the efforts of many. The negative effects to our community are compounded when the addict is a mother and her children are at risk of neglect and abuse. Often, children who are prenatally exposed to drugs or alcohol are also at a high risk for emotional and behavioral challenges. Without intervention, these children are much more likely to become addicts themselves, some in their early teens.